Wednesday, January 5, 2011

"Twilight" and Katy Perry among People's Choice winners

LOS ANGELES | Thu Jan 6, 2011 1:03am EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - "Twilight" again stole the limelight at the People's Choice awards on Wednesday, on a night that also saw big wins for singer Katy Perry and actor Johnny Depp at the start of the Hollywood awards season.

Organizers said a record 175 million votes were cast on social media and on the Internet for the favorite stars of television, movies and music in an awards show that is totally fan-driven.

Despite being the earliest of Hollywood's glittering awards shows, the People's Choice picks gave few clues this year to the likely winners of industry-voted honors such as the Oscars or the Screen Actors Guild honors.

"The Twilight Saga; Eclipse" the third installment of the popular vampire romance, won for favorite movie and favorite drama. "Twilight" star Kristen Stewart beat veterans like Julia Roberts, Angelina Jolie and Julia Roberts to take the favorite movie actress trophy .

"I can't believe this. You guys are unreal! For movie number 3 already?" said "Twilight" actor Taylor Lautner, accepting the trophies. "Twilight" and its cast are not expected to be among Oscar nominees when they are announced on Jan 25.

"Alice in Wonderland" star Johnny Depp took home the favorite movie actor trophy for the second year running.

Television honors went to musical comedy "Glee" and its scheming cheerleader played by Jane Lynch, while medical drama "House" picked up trophies for best drama and best actress for Lisa Edelstein.

The remake of "Hawaii Five-O" and the Twitter inspired comedy "$#*! (Bleep) My Dad Says" won for favorite new TV shows.

Katy Perry, whose infectious pop hits "California Gurls" and "Teenage Dream" dominated the charts last year, picked up trophies for favorite female artist and favorite web celebrity, beating the flamboyant Lady Gaga. "I've had an incredible year!," she told the audience.

Taylor Swift, whose "Speak Now" album was one of the biggest sellers of 2010, won best country artist. Swift's award was presented by singer Sir Elton John, a new parent with his partner David Furnish. "Elton! Congrats to you! You're a dad now," Swift told him, before thanking her own fans.

More than 44 awards were given out including one for best talk show host to comedian Conan O'Brien. O'Brien started 2010 by being forced out of his job on "The Tonight Show" and ended it by launching his own show on cable channel TBS.

"I want to thank everyone who made what could have been a horrible year into the best year of my life," O'Brien said.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant)



Online Business Consulting | Internet Business Consulting

Horrified Michael Jackson children saw father motionless

LOS ANGELES | Wed Jan 5, 2011 9:37pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters)- Two of Michael Jackson's children watched horrified as the pop star lay motionless on his bed the day he died, a bodyguard for the pop star said in emotional testimony on Wednesday.

"Paris (Jackson) screamed 'Daddy' and she started crying, and Dr. Murray said, 'Get them out, don't let them see their father like this,'" Alberto Alvarez told a Los Angeles court.

Alvarez was testifying on the second day of a preliminary hearing that will decide if Conrad Murray, Jackson's personal doctor, should stand trial for involuntary manslaughter.

The court also heard that Jackson appeared dead when paramedics arrived, and that Murray made no mention to first responders that the singer had used the powerful anesthetic propofol.

Alvarez said he was alerted by phone on June 25, 2009, that something was wrong with Jackson He entered the pop star's room and saw Murray at the bedside. The doctor told him they needed to get an ambulance, Alvarez said.

The security guard said he was reaching for his cell phone, when he saw that Jackson's eldest two children, Prince and Paris, who were then 12 and 11, had walked into the room.

"I turned to the children and I told them, 'Don't worry children, we'll take care of it, please go outside.' And I escorted them out of the bedroom," Alvarez said.

Alvarez said Murray told him Jackson had "a bad reaction," and ordered him to bag up medical vials and an intravenous pouch before calling paramedics.

"He (Murray) then grabbed a handful of bottles or vials and instructed me to put them in a bag," Alvarez said.

Prosecutors are seeking to establish that Murray was negligent in his treatment of the "Thriller" singer and tried to cover up his errors. Murray had been hired to care for Jackson before his planned comeback concerts in London.

Murray has pleaded not guilty to involuntary manslaughter but has admitted giving the 50-year-old singer a dose of propofol as a sleep aid, at Jackson's request.

Coroners officials say the "King of Pop" died of a drug overdose, due mainly to acute intoxication of propofol.

Murray's attorney, Ed Chernoff, suggested to Alvarez on Wednesday that Murray could have intended to bring the medication to the hospital, or set it aside to make room for the paramedics.

Alvarez said Murray told him to take away an intravenous bag that had "a milky substance" inside, and put it with the other bottles in a plastic bag that was placed inside a canvas carrying case. He said he did not know where the bags went.

Members of Jackson's family, including sisters Janet and La Toya, mother Katherine and father Joe, watched the testimony on Wednesday.



Online Business Consulting | Internet Business Consulting

Beatles being paid directly by iTunes in deal

Wed Jan 5, 2011 9:26pm EST

NEW YORK (Billboard) - It seems that the EMI/Beatles deal that finally brought the Fab Four's catalog to iTunes may be more groundbreaking than originally thought.

According to industry sources, iTunes is paying the Beatles' royalties from digital download sales in the United States directly to the band's company, Apple Corps, and is paying the songwriting mechanical royalties directly to Sony/ATV Music Publishing, which controls most of the Beatles' song catalog.

That suggests the royalty split could be more lucrative for the Beatles than it would be under the typical provisions of a standard artist contract, which treat digital downloads as a retail sale.

Under a standard contract, a label issues an album, licenses the songs from music publishers, collects all wholesale revenue from the retailers and then distributes royalties to the artist and the publisher.

For superstar artists, the royalty typically equals about 20%-25% of retail revenue. So in the case of iTunes' Beatles sales, where tracks are sold to the merchant for about 90 cents and are retailed for $1.29, a standard contract with a typical superstar royalty rate of 20%-25% would pay the Beatles about 18 cents to 22.5 cents per track sale.

But because iTunes is making royalty payments to the Beatles and Sony/ATV, EMI may be treating its deal with the digital retailer as a licensing pact.

Under such deals, the licensee pays mechanical royalties directly to a publisher and revenue from use of a master recording is split evenly between an artist and a label, making it far more lucrative for the artist than a standard artist contract.

An EMI spokesman declined to comment, as did Sony/ATV and representatives at Apple Corps and iTunes. And a high-placed source familiar with the deal insists that it's "absolutely incorrect" that the agreement between EMI and Apple Corps is a licensing deal.

However one describes the EMI-iTunes deal for the Beatles' catalog, its similarities to a licensing pact put it at the center of a heated debate over the nature of download sales.

Since the dawn of the digital age, artists, managers and labels have wrangled over whether a digital download purchase should be considered a licensed use of a master recording or a retail sale, much like the sale of a CD. Labels, of course, insist the latter designation is correct and have paid artist royalties accordingly.

But some recording acts, like Cheap Trick and the Allman Brothers, have taken their labels to court claiming that sales of their downloads should be treated as licensing deals. While Cheap Trick ultimately settled with Sony, the Allman Brothers case is still ongoing.

In another closely watched case, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in September voided a jury's decision on the royalty split issue that was favorable to Universal Music Group and against F.B.T., the music company that Eminem was originally signed to before Universal picked up his contract.

F.B.T. maintains that a digital download represents a licensing deal, which requires the higher royalty split. With the case sent back to the original court, UMG has filed a petition for the U.S. Supreme Court to review the lower court's decision.

In addition to a potentially much more lucrative royalty rate, iTunes' direct payment of U.S. royalties to the Beatles and Sony/ATV would give the band greater accounting transparency over their iTunes sales than they would if EMI distributed the royalties.

Other label/superstar contract negotiations have resulted in far costlier give-backs -- for example, acts like AC/DC and Garth Brooks negotiated the return of their master rights.



Online Business Consulting | Internet Business Consulting

Co-host of Roger Ebert's new movie show speaks out

Wed Jan 5, 2011 9:14pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Ignatiy Vishnevetsky raised a lot of eyebrows when he was announced as the new host of "Ebert Presents At the Movies."

But the 24-year-old critic for the film website Mubi and the Chicago Reader says he is not daunted by the prospect of filling the massive shoes left by the man who hired him for the spot -- former host Roger Ebert.

"You have to be the best you that you can possibly be," Vishnevetsky tells The Hollywood Reporter. "There is a legacy here. But the best way to honor that legacy is not to be Roger Ebert or Gene Siskel."

Already comparisons are being drawn between the Moscow-born Vishnevetsky and former host Siskel, who died of cancer in 1999.

"Everyone has been characterizing me as this cold analytical egghead guy," says Vishnevetsky "But I'm a man of extreme passion."

Besides, he adds, "I lean more toward Ebert who I liked more as a critic."

Vishnevetsky replaces radio critic Elvis Mitchell and will host along with 38-year-old Christy Lemire, film critic for the Associated Press. Ebert will contribute a weekly segment using a computer-generated voice.

"I know it's a big deal," Vishnevetsky says. "But when someone gives you this type of opportunity it makes you want to work a lot harder."

While Vishnevetsky promises to "continue the tradition" of onscreen squabbles started with Siskel and Ebert, he says he gets along famously with his new co-host.

"It helps we get along well because otherwise it would be just endless, endless clashes," Vishnevetsky says.

Meanwhile Vishnevetsky insists he will not be held back by his tricky last name. Roger Ebert's press release announcing the appointment even came with a phonetic guide ("Ig.nah.tee Vish.na.vet.ski").

"It's spelled exactly as it's pronounced," Vishnevetsky says. "And even if someone misspells the name, they remember it."

(Editing by Zorianna Kit)



Online Business Consulting | Internet Business Consulting

Jackson staffer says doctor told him to bag evidence

LOS ANGELES | Wed Jan 5, 2011 3:13pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - An employee of Michael Jackson testified on Wednesday that the singer's doctor ordered him to carry away medical vials and an intravenous bag before calling paramedics the day Jackson died.

Prosecutors want to establish that Dr. Conrad Murray, who was caring for Jackson at the time of his death, was negligent in his treatment and tried to cover up his errors.

The testimony of Alberto Alvarez, who said he was the director of logistics for Jackson, comes on the second day of a hearing into whether Murray should stand trial for involuntary manslaughter in the sudden death of the "Thriller" singer in June 2009.

Members of Jackson's family, including his sisters Janet and La Toya, mother Katherine and father Joe, watched Alvarez testify that Dr. Murray called him and told him to rush to Jackson's bedroom because the singer had "a bad reaction."

"He (Murray) then grabbed a handful of bottles or vials and instructed me to put them in a bag," Alvarez said.

Alvarez said Murray told him to take away an intravenous bag that had "a milky substance" inside, and put it with the other bottles in a plastic bag that was placed inside a canvas carrying case. He said he did not know where the bags went.

In opening statements on Tuesday, Los Angeles Deputy District Attorney David Walgren claimed more than 20 minutes elapsed between the time Murray found Jackson motionless in his bed and the point at which paramedics were called. In that time, and later in the day, prosecutors claim he covered up and concealed evidence.

The top-selling singer-songwriter died of a drug overdose in his rented mansion in Los Angeles, age 50. Coroners later determined his death was due mainly to acute intoxication of a powerful anesthetic, propofol.

The drug, which appears as a milky white liquid, is most often used in hospital settings but Jackson asked that it be administered to him at home as a sleep aid.

Houston-based cardiologist Murray, who had been hired to care for the singer ahead of a series of concerts, has admitted to giving Jackson propofol, but he has pleaded not guilty to involuntary manslaughter.

Attorneys believe the hearing may last up to two weeks, and at the end a judge will decide if there is enough evidence to make Murray stand trial, which legal experts believe will happen because the burden of proof in a preliminary hearing is relatively low.

(Writing by Bob Tourtellotte; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)



Online Business Consulting | Internet Business Consulting

Alec Baldwin "very, very interested" in political run

LOS ANGELES | Wed Jan 5, 2011 4:31am EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Hollywood liberal Alec Baldwin said on Tuesday he was "very, very interested" in running for political office, but was not planning to give up his day job anytime soon.

The actor, who plays a right-wing media executive on the sitcom "30 Rock," has expressed political aspirations before. But his discussion with talk show host Eliot Spitzer on CNN's "Parker Spitzer" seemed to advance his position.

"Yes, it's something that I'm very, very interested in," Baldwin, 52, replied when Spitzer asked if politics was a "game" he wanted to enter.

But Baldwin hedged his statement by saying that he was just beginning to understand better the craft of acting.

"To quit now when it really feels good and doing it feels good would be an enormously difficult thing to do," he said. "However, I do believe that people want to believe that someone who deeply cares about the middle-class...would like to seek public office."

CNN released a transcript and video of the interview, which will air on "Parker Spitzer" on Wednesday and Thursday. Baldwin noted that all four of the U.S. presidents after Ronald Reagan were educated in Ivy League schools.

"What's missing is ...people who have not lost sight of what the middle-class in this country needs," said Baldwin, who was raised in suburban New York by parents who were teachers.

Baldwin went on to attend George Washington University in Washington, D.C., and later New York University, neither of which is an Ivy League school like Harvard or Yale.

While he has achieved wealth and fame through such movies as "The Hunt for Red October" and his Emmy-winning stint on "30 Rock," Baldwin told Spitzer he still went to work everyday like many people and that "whatever I've accrued hasn't changed me as a person."

His CNN interview is not the first time he has talked of a political career. On "60 Minutes" in 2008, he said there were many things ahead for him besides acting.

"I'm going to 50," Baldwin said at the time. "There's no age limit on running for office, to a degree. (It is) something I might do one day."

(Reporting by Bob Tourtellotte; editing by Dean Goodman)



Online Business Consulting | Internet Business Consulting